Palmer v. Woods

149 Ill. 146
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 149 Ill. 146 (Palmer v. Woods) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. Woods, 149 Ill. 146 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This cause originated in the circuit court of Sangamon county by bill in chancery filed August 24,1886, wherein appellees were complainants, and appellants, with others, defendants. The purpose of the bill was to enforce the individual liability of the defendants, as stockholders of the Springfield Savings Bank, for the payment of amounts alleged to be severally due the complainants as depositors and creditors of the bank. A similar bill had been filed in the same court on the 21st of January, 1880, by Mary Queenan and George Kerger, on behalf of themselves and all other creditors of the bank who would come in and contribute to the expenses of the suit. Prior to December 27, 1882, several other creditors of the bank did voluntarily come in by way of interpleader, and were made parties to that bill. On the last named date, on the motion of complainants, “all other creditors standing in the same general relation to the defendants as complainants” were ordered to come in and file their claims on or before February 18, 1883, and in pursuance thereof notice by publication was given by the master in chancery to all creditors to file their claims before him on or before the date named. Afterwards, •in obedience to that order and notice, certain of the complainants in this bill filed their claims and proved them before the master, but at the hearing, January 29,1885, it was ordered, among other things, that all such claims, should be stricken from the files, it being recited in the order that the former one had been inadvertently made. The court then proceeded to find the amounts due those who had become voluntarily parties to the bill, the aggregate of which was $8886.91. It found the number of shares of stock liable for the claims allowed to be six hundred and seventy-eight, and the total value of those shares to be $67,800. The amount of the claims found due was then apportioned among the holders of the shares of stock found liable, which they were ordered to pay, etc.

•To the present bill, Palmer, Helmle and Eeisch filed four pleas. On the 25th of January, 1889, these pleas were set down for argument and adjudged insufficient, and the defendants electing to stand by them, their default was entered, and the bill as to them taken as confessed. On the 15th of July, 1890, a final decree was entered in favor of complainants, and these appellants appealed to the Appellate Court for the Third District. That court reversed the decree for reasons stated in its opinion, but holding with the circuit court as to the insufficiency of the defendants’ said pleas, (see 40 Ill. App. 182,) and remanded the cause generally. On the 29th of September, 1891, the cause was, by order of the circuit court, referred to the master to take proof. On December 30, 1891, defendants entered their motion to set aside the order of reference and set down the pleas for argument, but the court overruled the motion. The cause again proceeded to a hearing, .and a decree was rendered according to the prayer of the bill, which has been affirmed by the Appellate Court.

The first ground of reversal urged is, the refusal of the circuit court to set down the pleas for argument after the remandment of the cause by the Appellate Court. It is true, the remanding without specific directions gave the circuit court power over the record to allow amendments to the pleadings, permit the introduction of further testimony, or take any other step in the proceeding consistent with the principles announced in the opinion of the Appellate Court, but it did not, ipso facto, open up the question of the sufficiency of pleadings previously passed upon. In other words, a general order of remandment does not, as is assumed in the argument, have the effect of vacating all orders made in the case prior to the appeal or writ of error. As was said in Chickering et al. v. Failes et al. 29 Ill. 303 : “When the reversal of a decree or judgment occurs, the judgment of the court below, as to the parties to the record, is entirely abrogated, and the cause then stands in the court below precisely as if no trial had occurred. The case is then remitted to that court in precisely the same condition, in all respects, as it occupied before the trial in that tribunal. The decree, by its reversal, is in effect expunged from the record, and the court below has the same power over the record which it possessed before its decree or judgment was rendered.” The judgment or decree is vacated, but the pleadings and all orders in the case stand just as they were before the trial or hearing, unless they are disturbed by the decision of the Appellate Court. The court may allow amendments to the pleadings, and modify or set aside former orders, acting in harmony with the decision of the higher court; but unless it is asked to do so, the ease stands for re-trial on the same issues previously formed. Here the pleas had once been adjudged bad on argument. That judgment was in full force, in no way disturbed by the decision of the Appellate Court. Why should the circuit court have been required to decide the same question again? There was no motion to set aside the former adjudication, for leave to amend, or file other pleas or answers. The court was simply asked to reconsider its former ruling on the sufficiency of the pleas. It was clearly right in refusing to do-so, unless it had, from the opinion of the Appellate Court or otherwise, become convinced that its prior ruling was wrong. But if it were otherwise, no injury has resulted to appellants. They were given the full benefit of an exception to the ruling of the circuit court on the sufficiency of their pleas, and had it reviewed in the Appellate Court, and now present it to this court. Did the circuit and Appellate Courts err in holding the pleas insufficient ?

The first of these pleas sets up the proceedings in the former case in bar against all of the complainants. The third sets up the same proceeding in bar as to those of the complainants who filed their claims with the master, in pursuance of the order of December 27, 1882. We think a complete answer to all that is or can be said in favor of the validity of either of those pleas is, none of the complainants in this bill were parties to the decree pleaded in bar. Those who filed their claims-in obedience to the directions of the court were not voluntary parties, and when dismissed from the case and their claims stricken from the files they were in no worse position than those who never observed the first order of the court. No one objected to their being ordered out of the case. They were not bound to do so themselves. The question, therefore, in both pleas is the same, viz., shall complainants in this case be held bound by a decree in another to which they were not parties and to which they never consented.

That the proposition is against the general rule is admitted, but an attempt is made to bring it within exceptions to that rule. The exception relied upon is stated by the chancellor in Hallett v. Hallett, 2 Paige, 19, thus: “If there are many parties standing in the same situation as to their rights or claims upon a particular fund, and when the shares of a part can not be determined until the rights of all the others are settled or ascertained, as in the case of creditors of an insolvent estate or residuary legatees, all the parties interested in the fund must, in general, be brought before the court, so that there may be but one account and one decree settling the rights of all.

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Bluebook (online)
149 Ill. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-woods-ill-1894.